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pompion
pompion, pumpion Now rare. (ˈpʌmpɪən) Forms: 6–7 pompon, -one; (6 pompine), 6–7 pompeon, 6– pompion, pumpion, (7 pom-, pumpian). [Orig. a. obs. F. pompon ‘a pumpion or melon’ (Cotgr.), nasalized form of popon, poupon, also in 16th c. pepon, ad. L. pepo, -onem, a. Gr. πέπων, -ον-, large melon, pumpki...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Pompion Hill Chapel
Pompion (pronounced "punkin") Hill Chapel is small "back parish" church near Huger, South Carolina. Description and history
The Pompion Hill Chapel is located in a rural area, overlooking the Cooper River a few miles southwest of the hamlet of Huger.
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pompillion
▪ I. † pomˈpillion Obs. rare—1. [Cf. pompion 2.] A term applied in contempt to a man.a 1625 Fletcher Women Pleas'd iii. iv, He, hang him, poore Pompillion.▪ II. pompillion erron. f. populeon, an ointment.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Huger, South Carolina
The Cainhoy Historic District, Middleburg Plantation, Pompion Hill Chapel, Quinby Plantation House-Halidon Hill Plantation, and White Church are listed
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Madame Ponisi
Macclesfield in The Gov'nor, the Marquise del Rio Zares in Diplomacy, Countess Pompion in Old Heads and Young Hearts, the Duchess in The Duke's Motto,
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Alix Renaud
He was a professor of oral expression and diction, and he was the inventor of the word pompion, meaning firefighter and stemming from the French word pompier
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Pumpkin pie
The pumpkin was an early export to France; from there it was introduced to Tudor England, and the flesh of the "pompion" was quickly accepted as pie filling
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pompon
▪ I. pompon, pom-pom (ˈpɒmpɒn, ‖ pɔ̃pɔ̃, ˈpɒmpɒm) Also 8 pong pong, pomponne, 8–9 pomˈpoon, 9 pompom, ponpon, pompone. [a. F. pompon (1725 in Hatz.-Darm.) a tuft, top-knot; of uncertain origin; possibly a colloq. deriv. of pompe, pomp. OF. had pompon, pompion, but this seems unconnected.] 1. A jewel...
Oxford English Dictionary
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melopepon
† meˈlopepon Obs. [ad. L. mēlopepon-em, -pepo, a. Gr. µηλοπέπων, f. µῆλο-ν apple + πέπων a kind of gourd (orig. an ellipt. use of πέπων ripe). In the quots. melopepones may be the Latin plural.] A kind of melon.1555 Eden Decades 81 An other frute..in tendernes equal to melopepones. 1705 Beverley His...
Oxford English Dictionary
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pepon
† ˈpepon Obs. [ad. L. pepon-em (see prec.) or F. pepon (15–16th c. in Godef.) ‘a Pompion or Melon’ (Cotgr.).] A pumpkin, the fruit of Cucurbita Pepo; also, the plant itself.1382 Wyclif Num. xi. 5 The goordis, and the peponys [1388 & Coverd. melouns, Genev. pepons], and the leeke. 1533 Elyot Cast. He...
Oxford English Dictionary
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pumpkin
pumpkin (ˈpʌm(p)kɪn) Also 7–9 pompkin, 8–9 pumkin, 9 (U.S.) punkin. [An altered form of pumpion (see pompion), with the ending conformed to the suffix -kin. In U.S. the m is often further assimilated to the k, the word being pronounced (ˈpʌŋkɪn), and sometimes spelt punkin, esp. in comb.] 1. a. The ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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tompion
tampion, tompion, n. (ˈtæmpɪən, ˈtɒmp-) Forms: α. 5 tampyne, 5–6 -on, -ond, -yon, 6 -ioun, 6–8 -in, 7 -eon, 5– tampion; 6–7 tampkin, 7–8 tamkin; (7–9 tampoon). β. 7 tomping, 8–9 -ion, 9 -eon; 7 tomking, 7–8 -kin, tompkin. [a. F. tampon, in same senses (1440 in Godef. Compl.), a nasalized var. of F. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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